0:00Hey, pinball fans. Butch Peel with Jersey Jack Pinball. Today I'm going to show you how to replace the rubber ring on the Wizard of Oz Top Lane Slingshot. Now, at first look you might think you have to completely remove the Munchkinland playfield to do this repair. However, I'm going to show you a quicker and easier way to do this in this video. So, let's get the glass off this game power it down and get to work. The tools I'll be using for this minor repair. I have a telescopic magnetic tool so I can reach under into tight places and grab hardware nuts and bolts and screws and things like that. I have a long shank number two Phillips screwdriver that we can use for a lot of the different screws in the game. The long shank allows me to reach down into a hole you'll see why that's important a little later. Same thing with my quarter inch driver here it's a long shank quarter inch magnetic nut driver very handy tool also allows me to reach into long deep holes and things like that get to screws i'm going to use just a normal 11 30 seconds nut driver not a magnetic one just because the magnetic insert sometimes makes it a little difficult to get to nuts and and such and i found that to be the case in this particular repair and the last thing i've got is a magnetizer for my screwdriver You can buy magnetic screwdrivers, but I just generally get the regular screwdriver, and then you can magnetize them by putting a screwdriver shank through the hole in the magnet, rub it in there a few times, and it makes it where it picks up and holds hardware very easily. So that's very handy. One of the things I like to do with my hardware is put them in a small container while I'm working on a game. Things that I remove, I want to be able to just drop into a container. I'm going to use a really wide-based, shallow kind of container. I don't want something I have to try and reach down really far into, and I don't want something that's got a small base that will tip over easy and dump my screws on the playfield. So something shallow, something with a wide base, I set it on a playfield where it won't move around and I drop my hardware in there as I go and it keeps it handy for me. Just have to remember if I move my playfield around to get that off of the playfield otherwise I dump my screws somewhere and that's not good. To work on this game I'm going to pull the playfield up and out of the cabinet like so and rest it on the first set of rubber feet inside the lock down bar channel. What that playfield position is going to do for me is allow easier access to the upper part of the playfield where the slingshot that we're going to be working on resides. The rubber feet underneath will hold the playfield firmly in place as I work on things above. Okay, so the slingshot rubber we're looking to replace is underneath this plastic at the top of the playfield, just above the munchkin line playfield. So you can see that there's two posts here and the third post is back up under here and the slingshot rubber goes around all three of those. it breaks it's likely to fly back inside so you'll need to find the old rubber and pull it out somewhere in this process. This game has the Back Alley Creations Tornado and other mods. Big shout out to Matt if you're out there watching. This tornado is kind of in the area where I want to work so I'm going to remove that first. So I'm going to use my Phillips screwdriver and my magnetizer here Make sure that my screwdriver has good magnetism and I going to take off the two screws that hold the tornado in place and that why we use the magnetizer so that we can keep our screws from falling into the play field So I remove that and now I have much better access to the hole that I'm going to be working in. So the first thing I'm going to need to do is remove this this plastic and get it out of my way. Here's a little close up of the two nuts that I'm going to need to remove. The first one that's up under the lip of the ramp a little bit and then the second one over here on the edge. So those two come out and then that plastic will come off. So I'm going to use a 11-30 seconds nut driver and I'm going to kind of gently push this aside. I don't want to pull this completely off or anything so I'm just going to push it aside until I can get my nut driver in place there. I'm going to loosen it until I can tell it's at the end of its run. Then I'm going to make sure I don't lose it again by getting my magnet here and twisting it that last little bit so that I take it out with my magnet. The other one is a little bit more tricky to get to. I have to kind of go on an angle, which this is not really made to do. Sometimes that can be very tight and hard to get started. So what I might use to break that loose would be one of these 11-30 seconds wrenches. So I'm going to put the round end on here, put it on the screw there, and I'm going to break it loose with just a couple of twists here, just to make sure that it's not going to be difficult for me to get started with my nut driver. I'm going to go back to my nut driver, I'm going to go on this angle here, I'm going apply medium kind of pressure here turning this slowly slowly when it starts to skip I take a pressure off I don't want to mess up the end of the the nut because the nut is really made to be driven straight in and I'm kind of cheating here by coming on angle it's a nylon lock nut so it has this locking mechanism at the top which is a piece of nylon so I can tell when it starts turning really easy that I'm at the end of that so then again I get my magnet and I bring it over here and I make the final couple of turns with my finger so that I can bring it off with my magnet again now I can lift this playfield plastic off and pull it completely out of the game and set it aside and there is our slingshot rubber the slingshot rubber is not broken on this game it actually is just going to be replaced by a nice silicone one but you can tell by the markings on this if I zoom in a little bit here you can see on the rubber itself where it's likely to break and that's where this slingshot arm is pushing out on it all the time it makes indentations in here eventually cuts through and causes that to break so if my slingshot rubber were broken this would be more of what I didn't see I'd see the two switches here I want to be careful not to catch on those and bend those. They're very sensitive. But yeah, I wouldn't see any any rubber going around here. The third post you can't see it's back up under here. So here's the first two posts that were exposed for the slingshot and the third one is actually up underneath the edge of the playfield there. You can see it kind of in the center of the picture with the ring around it still So in order to be able to get a new rubber over the top of this post that concealed under the edge of this mini playfield I going to need to loosen the playfield a little bit I not going to take it off completely I don need to do that I just need a little clearance underneath it so I can slide that rubber up over the top of the post and get it into place. So in order to do that, I need to loosen two screws at this edge of the playfield that will give me that amount of play.